scholarly journals On the isotopic composition of fission fragments

2021 ◽  
Vol 812 ◽  
pp. 136017
Author(s):  
C. Schmitt ◽  
P. Möller
1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 1418-1425 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. W. Boyd ◽  
H. W. J. Connor

Cyclohexane and benzene and mixtures of each of these with cyclohexane-d12 and benzene-d6 have been irradiated with fission fragments using thin sources of [Formula: see text]. The hydrogen yield G(H2) for cyclohexane is 7.73, and is only slightly reduced by the addition of benzene. G(H2) for benzene is 2.14. The isotopic composition of the hydrogen from the four mixtures indicates that most is formed in bimolecular processes.To correlate these results with those obtained in gamma radiolysis, a mechanism is proposed based on hydrogen formation by reactions between transient species in both cyclohexane and benzene.


Author(s):  
Dalip Singh Verma ◽  
Kushmakshi .

Mass and charge distribution of the cross-section for the fission fragments obtained in the decay of hot and rotating compound system formed in the reaction 48Ca + 162Dy → 210Rn* at an incident energy 139.6 MeV has been calculated using the dynamical cluster-decay model. Isotopic composition for each element belonging to the symmetric mass region has been obtained. The shell closure at N=50 for light and at Z=50 for heavy mass binary fragments gives a deep minima in the fragmentation potential at touching configuration and governs the fission partition of the compound system. The fission fragments of the symmetric mass region have their dominating presence along with strong odd-even staggering i.e., even-Z fission fragments are more probable than the odd ones, similar to the observed trends of the yield.


1997 ◽  
Vol 43 (143) ◽  
pp. 138-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. O. Jeffries ◽  
K. Morris ◽  
W.F. Weeks ◽  
A. P. Worby

AbstractSixty-three ice cores were collected in the Bellingshausen and Amundsen Seas in August and September 1993 during a cruise of the R.V. Nathaniel B. Palmer. The structure and stable-isotopic composition (18O/16O) of the cores were investigated in order to understand the growth conditions and to identify the key growth processes, particularly the contribution of snow to sea-ice formation. The structure and isotopic composition of a set of 12 cores that was collected for the same purpose in the Bellingshausen Sea in March 1992 are reassessed. Frazil ice and congelation ice contribute 44% and 26%, respectively, to the composition of both the winter and summer ice-core sets, evidence that the relatively calm conditions that favour congelation-ice formation are neither as common nor as prolonged as the more turbulent conditions that favour frazil-ice growth and pancake-ice formation. Both frazil- and congelation-ice layers have an av erage thickness of 0.12 m in winter, evidence that congelation ice and pancake ice thicken primarily by dynamic processes. The thermodynamic development of the ice cover relies heavily on the formation of snow ice at the surface of floes after sea water has flooded the snow cover. Snow-ice layers have a mean thickness of 0.20 and 0.28 m in the winter and summer cores, respectively, and the contribution of snow ice to the winter (24%) and summer (16%) core sets exceeds most quantities that have been reported previously in other Antarctic pack-ice zones. The thickness and quantity of snow ice may be due to a combination of high snow-accumulation rates and snow loads, environmental conditions that favour a warm ice cover in which brine convection between the bottom and top of the ice introduces sea water to the snow/ice interface, and bottom melting losses being compensated by snow-ice formation. Layers of superimposed ice at the top of each of the summer cores make up 4.6% of the ice that was examined and they increase by a factor of 3 the quantity of snow entrained in the ice. The accumulation of superimposed ice is evidence that melting in the snow cover on Antarctic sea-ice floes ran reach an advanced stage and contribute a significant amount of snow to the total ice mass.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 1060-1066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Cui ZHANG ◽  
Ying-Zhe CAI ◽  
Parkes Stephen ◽  
McCabe Matthew F. ◽  
Fan YANG ◽  
...  

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